A synthetic proposition is one which is true by virtue of the meaning of its terms and facts about the world — philosophy
I think you typoed. Synthetic propositions are *not* true in virtue of meaning.
I thought that was the definition of a synthetic proposition though? A synthetic proposition is true by virtue of the meaning of its terms and due to facts about the world, whereas analytic propositions are true by virtue of the meaning of their terms alone? — philosophy
An “analytic” sentence, such as “Ophthalmologists are doctors,” has historically been characterized as one whose truth depends upon the meanings of its constituent terms (and how they’re combined) alone, as opposed to a more usual “synthetic” sentence, such as “Ophthalmologists are rich,” whose truth depends also upon the facts about the world that the sentence represents, e.g., that ophthalmologists are rich.
The three laws of thought, as put forth by Aristotle, are analytic propositions, not because of their content, but because they are true necessarily, which just means their negation is impossible — Mww
Logical operations (...) don't stand independently (.....) outside of a logical system. — MindForged
Because intuitionistic logic alone has existed for nearly a century now — MindForged
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